It’s long past the time when the people of Louisiana should get their collective heads out of the sand and take an objective, educated look at the state’s budgetary crisis.
The Revenue Estimating Conference Tuesday announced that the state must slash expenses by another $210 million because of drops in anticipated revenue.
The Revenue Estimating Conference, comprised of LSU economist Jim Richardson, House Speaker Chuck Kleckley (R-Lake Charles), Commissioner of Administration Paul Rainwater and Senate President John Alario (R-Westwego), monitors state expenses and revenues on an ongoing basis.
On Tuesday, the four heard a presentation from Greg Albrecht, chief economist for the Legislative Fiscal Office. The news was bleak and the four officials dropped the revenue forecast for the coming year by $304 million.
But it’s not as if no one could see this train wreck coming.
Much like the tribulations currently being visited upon the New Orleans Saints, the state’s fiscal woes are 100 percent self-inflicted.
As the Ol’ Perfesser, former New York Yankees manager Casey Stengel, would say if he were still with us: “You can look it up.”
We did.
And while it come as a surprise to members of the House and Senate, the information from the Louisiana Department of Revenue is right there in a little known but readily available publication entitled Tax Exemption Budget 2011-2012.
The real puzzle is why no one else has bothered to ferret out this data. Why go to the expense and bother to publish it if no one in a decision-making position is even going to bother to read it?
But before we get into that report, let’s take a quick look back to May of 2008, four months after Gov. Bobby Jindal took office.
The state at that time was flush with money, thanks to federal funds dumped into the state to aid in the recovery from the devastation of hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
Never content to grapple with fiscal prudency, legislative leaders and Jindal conducted a series of backroom discussions—as usual, out of eyesight and earshot of the public. Jindal emerged, beaming, to announce the good news: the highly regarded Stelly Tax Plan was being scrapped.
The bill, Senate Bill 87 by Sen. B.L. “Buddy” Shaw (R-Shreveport), rolled state income tax rates back to 2002 levels in January of 2009.
Jindal trumpeted that the bill would save single filers as much as $500 a year and joint filers $1,000.
What the governor did not say—but Albrecht did—was that single filers would have to make as much as $90,000 per year to reap the $500 savings and joint filers would have to make more than $150,000 to save the maximum $1,000.
With a median household income of $43,733 in Louisiana in 2008, the Stelly repeal, while obviously a welcome break for the wealthy, was of no benefit whatever to middle- and low-income Louisianans.
Albrecht also said the total cost to the state treasury would be about $300 million per year, beginning in the 2009-2010 budget cycle.
Perhaps at this point it’s worth reiterating the most recent loss of revenue as projected by the Revenue Estimating Conference: $304 million.
Now to the Revenue Department’s Tax Exemption Budget.
The document is a mind-numbing 409 pages but one does not have to examine every page to see what has happened in Louisiana over the past few years.
In fact, pages 6 and 17 pretty much tell the story.
Page 17 provides a year-by-year summary of revenue losses from various tax exemptions granted by the state. The exemptions include corporate and individual income taxes, sales taxes and severance taxes, among others.
The combined four-year total for all tax exemptions shows that the state has lost a little more than $18 billion since the 2008-2009 fiscal year, which began on July 1, 2008, six months after Jindal took office.
Much has been made by the administration of the unfunded accrued liability (UAL) of the state’s four retirement plans.
That combined UAL? $18.3 billion.
The breakdown shows a four-year loss of $5.6 billion in corporate income tax exemptions and another $5.6 billion in sales tax exemptions. Individual income tax exemptions account for an additional $4.2 billion and severance tax exemptions were another $1.5 billion.
Page 6, however, was the most revealing in that it illustrates the disparity between the corporate income taxes paid and the sales and income taxes paid by individuals in Louisiana in Fiscal Year 2010-2011.
• Corporate income taxes—$198 million;
• Estimated corporate income tax exemptions—$1.46 billion;
• Total potential collections—$1.58 billion;
• Percentage of corporate income tax loss—88.1 percent.
The state was not nearly so generous with individuals.
• Total sales tax collections—$2.67 billion;
• Estimated sales tax exemptions—$1.39 billion;
• Total potential sales tax collections—$4.06 billion;
• Percentage of sales tax loss—34.3 percent.
Sales taxes, of course, are paid by everyone. Even the poorest of the poor pay the same sales tax rates as the most wealthy, making sales taxes one of the most unfair.
Individual income tax collections were no kinder.
• Total individual income tax collections—$2.39 billion;
• Total individual income tax exemptions—$1.13 billion;
• Total potential individual income tax collections—$3.52 billion;
• Percentage of individual income tax loss—32.1 percent.
To recap, the state collects only 11.9 percent of the potential corporate income taxes while exempting the remainder.
With sales and individual income tax, however, collections were 65.7 percent and 67.9 percent, respectively.
With this administration, the solution such an uneven playing field is obvious: more corporate tax breaks.
Jindal is pushing a package of bills that will award new tax breaks to businesses that are considering relocating or expanding into Louisiana.
And of course, the House overwhelming approved all three bills even though the Legislative Fiscal Office estimated the state could lose millions of dollars in tax income.
But Rep. Joel Robideaux (R-Lafayette) said the cuts would generate more tax dollars for Louisiana than the breaks will cost the state in lost revenue.
One bill, approved by a vote of 86-9 will give a payroll tax cut of between 6 percent and 15 percent for creating high-paying jobs with health care benefits. The question that was never asked was, where are the lower-paying jobs?
A 25 percent rebate over five years on relocation costs for companies moving corporate headquarters to Louisiana was approved by a vote of 81-13.
Finally, a bill calling for a different way to calculate state corporate income and franchise taxes, thereby lessening tax payments for participants, passed unanimously, 100-0.
So, while Jindal’s Deputy Chief of Staff Kristy Nichols testifies in favor of gutting retirement benefits for state employees, lamenting, “We’re drowning in debt,” her boss keeps on keeping on with lucrative tax breaks for his corporate friends, many of them campaign donors.
The rest of you?
May 15 is the deadline for paying your “fair share” in state income taxes.
Don’t be late. The state needs the revenue.



It’s well past time for thinking Louisiana citizens of all political stripes to stand up and demand an end to the hemmorage of taxpayer dollars being shoveled into the open greedy maws of out-of state corporations, Jindal’s fiscal crisis year after year is of his own making and there is nothing unexpected or accidental about it. He has deliberately given away state employee raises (which also figure into lower retirement benefits, not just lower current income), and funding for state services for the most fragile and at-risk CITIZENS to repay his political debts. The blatant corruption of this adminisitration is amazing. It’s past time to put a stop to it, If legislators won’t do the right thing and stand up to the bully, RECALL THEM ALL.
“But Rep. Joel Robideaux (R-Lafayette) said the cuts would generate more tax dollars for Louisiana than the breaks will cost the state in lost revenue.”
Same ol’ same ol’!! If this were true, shouldn’t the state’s services and obligations be fully funded?… And please explain, with all these tax dollars being generated as a result of corporate tax breaks, why is there a UAL, and why are state employees treated like co-signers on a bad debt? Seems the Jindal/Moret team has punk’d you and the rest of the legislature.
Additionally, the new numbers claiming average Louisiana household income is up but personal income tax collection is lower than expected signals a real problem with our personal income tax brackets. (Of course, “median” income would be a better measure of the overall well-being of citizens as it tells us where the income bar is really set.) But if average income is higher and personal income collection is lower, it would indicate a skewing of personal income tax collection. This skewed number could be the result of 2 factors or combination of factors: 1) while average may be up, total population is down, so the total amount of personal income dollars is down and/or 2) there’s a large income gap between very high income earners and very low income earners, and the tax breaks that fall disproportionately on the high end of personal income has driven down personal income tax revenue. Either way, Louisiana has an out-migration and a screwed up personal tax system, neither of these bodes well for the state in the long term.
Thanks for citing this document!
This facet of our state budget woes deserves much more visibility. And, page 17 provides one more mystery on row 5, where “No data” are available on Tax Incentives and Exemption Contracts. Note that the Revenue Losses might be in the $300 million range…a wild guess based on 2009 to 2011 figures. And then I juxtaposed that with the ADDITIONAL $211 billion budget deficit projected earlier this week.
A balanced personal and corporate tax structure helps to make government work. I believe that the Stelly Act repeal was short-sighted.
The current budget strategy demands that legislators and local government bodies expose their priorities by constraining revenues. It also generates opportunities for deal-making, especially for those with the upper hand.
I distrust the administration and most of our lawmakers because of the scarcity of actual two-way communication… I’m eager see and hear the discourse (INTERCHANGE) on proposals. Please…questions and discussions, not just monologues.
It would appear we are, collectively, so dumb that we cannot see a very obvious pattern here. When was the last time we did not face a fiscal cliff? Hint: A lot of damage was done and a lot of money was temporarily pumped into the economy for recovery.
We have a STRUCTURAL BUDGET PROBLEM that isn’t going to go away as long as we use tricks and one-time fixes year after year. AND, as Tom clearly points out, the course in Louisiana is to do everything we can to make matters WORSE.
It’s hard to even know when the state budget was last actually balanced at any stage from recommended through enacted. If I base a budget on income I know may very well not be there in the year I am budgeting, much less the ones thereafter, have I really made an effort to balance it, or am I just fooling myself and trying to fool others to boot?
We are fortunate to have ONE consistently credible source of objective information for the Revenue Estimating Conference, Greg Albrecht. IF anybody would really listen to what he says and IF they could set aside politics long enough to do so, we might have a chance. Otherwise we are gong to follow the dictates of politics and ideology down the path to meltdown.
I have said it before and I will say it again: Why doesn’t the governor do something about all the frivolous spending done by all the state agencies. Things like gas guzzling vehicles, mini vacations under the guise of “learning seminars”, electronic toys, consulting fees for previous employees who have retired, contracts with “buddies”, etc. Come on citizens of Louisiana – start delving into the spending habits of all the agencies including the governor’s office!!
Your points are well-taken. However, it would appear no amount of budget-cutting reaches these things – they continue under even the direst circumstances. Although the cumulative effect of not doing these things would not solve our budget problem, you would think common sense would dictate being as frugal as possible with the limited resources available so as to maximize services to citizens.